The chaotic, scattered manner in which the…
September 1503 CE
The chaotic, scattered manner in which the squadrons had rounded the cape has created great delays in the armada.
The apparent two have arrived in Malindi, the launching point for the Indian Ocean crossing, quite late in the summer.
They can not wait long for the others, for fear of missing the summer southwesterly monsoon winds to take them across to India—a delay that can add as much as an extra year to their journey—so the Indian Ocean crossing of the Fifth Armada is to be accomplished in separate waves.
The second squadron, the ships of Francisco de Albuquerque and Nicolau Coelho, had been the first to cross the Indian Ocean in August 1503.
They are followed soon after by the solitary ship of Duarte Pacheco Perreira (of the first squadron), followed soon after by d'Almada's São Cristóvão (on which Empoli probably sails) and, a couple of weeks later, by the captain-major Afonso de Albuquerque himself.
All three ships of the third squadron (Antonio de Saldanha, Rui Lourenço Ravasco and Diogo Fernandes Pereira) will miss this year's summer monsoon and will only cross the Indian Ocean the next year.